Haitians' Protected Status expires on July 22nd. If it's not renewed, more than 50,000 people will have to move back to Haiti, including parents of children born in the US.

Karen Frederick, 31, attended the protest Saturday. She has legal residency in the US, but her brothers and parents have TPS. She says sending people back to Haiti would be economically devastating for a country still reeling from the 2010 earthquake, Hurricane Matthew, and a recent Cholera epidemic.

"It’s not only it’s going to deport 55,000 people living here, but it’s a deportation for their family members living in Haiti as well. So it’s going to be tough, it’s going to be hard for us if they send them back home," said Frederick.

She's concerned about people in Haiti who would no longer have remittances from people in the US.

Representatives from The Haitian Lawyers Association, the Miami-Dade Democratic Party, the state senate, and other groups addressed the crowd in English and Creole from the bed of a pick-up truck.

Many repeated Donald Trump's campaign promise to be Haiti's "greatest champion," and called on the president to stand by that promise.

"There has been fear sown through our immigrant community... causing them to fear interacting with any government entity," said Wasserman Schultz.

Representatives from Catholic Charities, FANM or Haitian Women of Miami, the American Immigration Lawyers Association and other groups were among those who met with Wasserman Schultz at her Sunrise office.

Farah Larrieux is a Haitian who for the past dozen years has built a tele-life in South Florida. She's hosted the public affairs program "Haiti Journal" on PBS channel WPBT. She has a TV production company.

Is the presidential candidate who threw promises to Little Haiti throwing a dragnet over it now that he’s President?

Candidate Donald Trump pledged to Haitian-American voters here that he’d be their “greatest champion.” But the Associated Press reports the Trump Administration is fishing for criminals among Haitian immigrants – specifically the 50,000 Haitians living in the U.S. under Temporary Protected Status, or TPS.